- #36
kote
- 867
- 4
Sorry! said:Kote what is your point? That we have systems that give seemingly a true answer? I.e. existence exist; I'm pretty sure this is a tautological statement is it not? What does that have to do with you know the absolute truth of the matter of whether or not existence exists?
The point is that "truth is subjective" or "truth is relative" or "truth depends on your perspective" is wrong. I can have absolute knowledge about any sort of analytic concept. I know that unicorns have one horn. I know that all bachelors are unmarried.
Can I know absolutely if humans evolved from chimps? No. Do I know there is an absolute answer that I just can't get at? Yes. This is relevant to the OP because undefined questions, questions with answers that are ambiguously true or false, are meaningless.
What would it even mean to ask a question if answers are all subjective and relative? Why bother asking anything or doing any science or philosophy? Questions are only meaningful if there is a truth to be revealed, and "common sense" never trumps logical consistency. Without logic there is no such things as knowledge, only meaningless thoughts. Science, philosophy, and all rational thought depend on logic.
As for your earlier question, yes, I have a philosophy degree, so please excuse my bias. You can blame the institution for tainting me with its required logic sequence. It's quite possible that I'm just naively spouting the party line.